Tài liệu How to Write a Thesis - SECOND EDITION pdf

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In this book, the author moves beyond the basics of thesis writing, introducing practical writing techniques such as freewriting, generative writing and binge writing This edition now deals with the range of different doctorates on offer and integrates more examples of thesis writing Building on the success of the evidence-based approach used in the first edition, there is also new coverage of Masters theses and undergraduate research projects, along with outlines of useful generic structures for social science and humanities projects Rowena Murray is a Reader in the Department of Educational and Professional Studies at the University of Strathclyde She has developed a Thesis Writing course, runs consultancies on Writing for Publication, and has published books on many aspects of academic writing She is also the author of How to Survive your Viva (Open University Press 2003) and Writing for Academic Journals (Open University Press 2004) Cover design Hybert Design • www.hybertdesign.com www.openup.co.uk Praise for this edition: “This book has filled a huge gap in the market…Using wonderful examples, this book will not only help students build up a writer's ‘toolbox’, but will also build confidence and empower thesis writers.” PROFESSOR WILLIAM J KERR, Department of Pure and Applied Chemistry, WestCHEM, University of Strathclyde Praise for the previous edition: “Rowena Murray's down to earth approach both recognises and relieves some of the agony of writing a PhD The advice in this book is both practical and motivational; sometimes it's ‘PhD-saving’ too.” DR CHRISTINE SINCLAIR, Lecturer in the Centre for Academic Practice and Learning Enhancement at the University of Strathclyde Murray How to Write a Thesis is the most grounded guide available to students on the practicalities surrounding thesis writing and should be recommended reading for, and by, all supervisors S Write a Thesis How to Write a Thesis provides a down-toearth guide to help students shape their theses It offers valuable advice as well as practical tips and techniques, incorporating useful boxed summaries and checklists to help students stay on track or regain their way The book is the culmination of many years of work with postgraduates and academics and covers all aspects of the research, writing and editing involved in the process of successfully completing a thesis SECON D EDITION E C O N D E D I T I O N How to Write a Thesis How to SECOND EDITION Rowena Murray Write a Thesis How to How to Write a Thesis SECOND EDITION How to Write a Thesis SECOND EDITION Rowena Murray Open University Press Open University Press McGraw-Hill Education McGraw-Hill House Shoppenhangers Road Maidenhead Berkshire England SL6 2QL email: enquiries@openup.co.uk world wide web: www.openup.co.uk and Two Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121-2289, USA First published 2002 Copyright © Rowena Murray 2006 All rights reserved Except for the quotation of short passages for the purposes of criticism and review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence from the Copyright Licensing Agency Limited Details of such licences (for reprographic reproduction) may be obtained from the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd of 90 Tottenham Court Road, London, W1T 4LP A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library ISBN-10: 335 21968 ISBN-13: 978 335 21968 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data CIP data applied for Typeset by RefineCatch Limited, Bungay, Suffolk Printed in Poland by OZ Graf S.A www.polskabook.pl This book is dedicated to Jimmy Walker And to anyone who’s thinking about writing a thesis out of irrepressible enthusiasm for a subject – it! Chapter is for Morag Contents Preface to the first edition Preface to the second edition Acknowledgements Overview Introduction: How to write 1000 words an hour The need for this book What the students say A writer’s ‘toolbox’ Principles of academic writing The literature on writing Disciplinary differences Thinking about structure Prompts Enabling student writing Writing in a second language Grammar, punctuation, spelling Goal setting Lifelong learning Audience and purpose Timetable for writing Checklist: defining the writing task Thinking about writing a thesis Doctorate or masters? What is a doctorate? New routes to the PhD Why are you doing a doctorate? Internal and external drivers PhD or professional doctorate? Full-time or part-time? What will you use writing for? Regulations How will it look on the page? xiii xv xvi xvii 1 11 12 14 18 19 20 21 22 24 27 29 29 30 31 31 32 35 36 37 38 41 42 43 46 viii CONTENTS Demystification: codes and guides How will my thesis be assessed? What are the criteria? Defining ‘originality’ What is the reader looking for? IT processes and needs Reasons for not writing Peer discussion and support Your first meeting with your supervisor Questions for reflection Prompts for discussion Writing timetable Checklist: pre-planning Starting to write Can’t it wait till later? Audiences and purposes Primary audience Secondary audience Immediate audience The role of the supervisor A common language for talking about writing Writing to prompts Freewriting Generative writing Checklist: starting to write Seeking structure Revising your proposal Outlining Finding a thesis Writing a literature review Plagiarism Designing a thesis ‘Writing in layers’ Writing locations Writing times Checklist: seeking structure 47 53 54 58 60 64 67 67 68 70 70 70 72 73 74 75 75 76 77 78 82 86 87 99 102 103 104 105 107 108 121 123 125 127 128 129 CONTENTS The first milestone First writing milestone The first-year report From notes to draft Dialogue Monitoring Pressure What is progress? Work-in-progress writing A writers’ group Checklist: the first milestone Becoming a serial writer What is a serial writer? Scaffolding for an argument Paragraph structure Introductory paragraphs Writing about the method(s) Study buddy Regular writing Problems with writing Writer’s block Incremental writing Writing binges Developing a writing strategy Checklist: becoming a serial writer Creating closure What is closure? Interim closure Don’t put it off any longer Research journal Writing habits Halfway point Brown’s eight questions Pulling it all together A design for writing Frustration Writing conclusions Checklist: creating closure ix 130 131 131 132 135 137 138 139 140 147 154 155 156 157 157 161 163 165 166 167 168 176 176 178 179 180 180 182 183 184 190 192 194 196 197 197 198 203 AUDIENCE AND PURPOSE (AGAIN) 287 to be appropriate for some journals or publishers It is likely to be a sensible idea, and a professional strength, to be able to produce more than one style of writing This brings us back to the position of rhetorical choices, rather than rights and wrongs However, moving to writing for publication will require a shift for many thesis writers Perhaps dissertation/thesis writing is dysfunctional, but no more than any other form of academic writing Your undergraduate writing was read by even fewer people than your thesis will be and was even less interesting to readers beyond the university It could be that what is problematic is the mystique surrounding it There is a similar mystique surrounding writing for publication, unless you have had very good mentoring during your PhD, and very good guidance, once your PhD is completed, on how to translate your work into your first book The word ‘dysfunctional’ may be misleading; your writing was subjected to more detailed scrutiny than at any other time, and you may think this scrutiny went too far, yet this process will be repeated every time you submit your writing for peer review In fact, given the apparent dominance of certain groups, nepotism and various forms of discrimination (documented, in some contexts), the scrutiny is likely to be even harder and, sometimes, unfair The question for the new writer is how to join the current community: what are the acceptable ideological forms and discourse practices that dominate in publications in your field today? This is a related question to the ground you covered in your literature review, where you summarized historical and contemporary debates; but it may have a different focus: what are the dominant schools of thought, whether or not you agree with them? How can you join the discussion in which they are participating? It is up to you to develop a professional voice and it may help to analyse how other voices have made themselves heard Writing for publication requires a shift in voice from the voice of the thesis Whole sections may be irrelevant For example, does the reader need to know – as your supervisor did – the detail of the context for your work or every turn in the argument for your approach? A shift in style may also be a good idea, in order to move away from the more tentative forms of argument that often feature in a thesis: I suspect that the dissertation uses more conditional sentences than does any other prose form in the language The worst offenders in this respect are the social scientists In these disciplines the young appear to learn early in their careers an inviolable relationship between truth and tortuous conditionality Thus: all things being equal, it would appear to be the case that, under given circumstances, it may not be uncommon for writers of dissertations to execute certain prose styles which those who seem to like their English straight and strong might conceivably call a perversion of the language (Armstrong in Harman and Montagnes [1976] 2000: 29) 288 10: AFTER THE THESIS EXAMINATION: MORE WRITING? Looking for topics Looking for topics may seem absurd; surely you have more than enough of those? But what is required is a selection that fits the agenda of the publishers or journal editors • Convert your conference presentations Use your OHPs or PowerPoint slides as an outline • Write review papers • Write about your original research There is no need to put all your good work into one paper; you can probably carve it up into several papers for different journals This is how you can become known as an expert in your field: by focusing on one area in your publications ‘Salami slicing’ is how some people refer to this, often with the implication that it is in some way cheating However, it would be foolish – and may not be feasible – to put all of your work in one mammoth paper Besides, we all know that experts in our field write about related work in their papers The ethics of ‘recycling’ are worth thinking through too: some people will argue that it is unethical to write ‘versions’ of the same paper for more than one journal It is true that simply repeating yourself will win you no friends and could have much more serious consequences However, if you reshape your material as you write about a topic more than once, and if you target the new audience of the next journal, then it is likely that you will develop your thinking about your topic in any case In other words, writing about your subject more than once can be a way of developing your ideas Is one publication in one journal going to bring your work to the attention of all the key people in your field? Probably not It is important to consider whether you ought to be reaching a wider audience than the readership of one journal For example, if you have invented a new approach, a new course or a new synthesis, that may be the topic of one paper It may appear as an appendix in the next paper, or two In this way, two or three or more sets of readers will see your new invention, even though it has become marginalized in later papers THE END 289 The end Writing a thesis is a massive learning experience for a modest contribution to knowledge In the beginning, it seemed as though it would be the opposite We had such grand designs at the start But that is part of the learning process too: you now know the limitations of research designs, the constraints of academic writing and the power-plays of academic life You have learned how to work within these structures Paradoxically, in writing a thesis you have learned how to write to the highest standards by writing well enough Checklist Before and after the viva • Find out what your university’s code of practice says about the viva Find out if your department follows the code Ask your supervisor(s) • If you don’t already know, find out who your examiners are now • Find out who will attend your viva Find out what their roles will be in your viva Find out who will ask questions and who will not • Ask how long it is likely to last • Find out what will happen at the end of the viva: will you be told the decision immediately, or not? • Find out what the categories of decision are What they all mean? • If you would like to give a presentation at the start of your viva, say so Ask your supervisor(s) if this is OK, how long it can be, etc • Ask to see the examiners’ report form that will be used in your viva • Will the examiner give you a list of corrections/revisions? 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Confessions of the Critics London: Routledge Williams, J and Coldron, J (eds) (1996) Writing for Publication: An Introductory Guide for People Working in Education Sheffield: PAVIC Wilson, W.L (1999a) Gathering and Evaluating Information from Secondary Sources Glasgow: Universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow and Strathclyde Wilson, W.L (1999b) Interpreting and Documenting Research and Findings Glasgow: Universities of Edinburgh, Glasgow and Strathclyde Winter, R., Buck, A and Sobiechowska, P (1999) Professional Experience and the Investigative Imagination: The Art of Reflective Writing London: Routledge Winter, R., Griffiths, M and Green, K (2000) The ‘academic’ qualities of practice: what are the criteria for a practice-based PhD?, Studies in Higher Education, 25(1): 26–37 Woolf V ([1928] 1993) Orlando Harmondsworth: Penguin Zuber-Skerrit, O and Ryan, Y (eds) (1994) Quality in Postgraduate Education London: Kogan Page Index abstracts, 160, 203 see also Brown’s eight questions anxiety, 138–9, 233 assessment, 53 annual report, 45 criteria, 54–58, 258 first year report or ’synoptic paper’, 131–2 what readers look for, 60–3 see also viva and quality audience and purpose, 29, 42–3, 75, 285–7 primary audience, 75–6 secondary audience, 76 immediate audience, 77 binges, 166, 176–7, 223 Brown’s eight questions, 194–6 chapters, 124–7 conclusions, 198–203 discussion, 242–3 methods, 163–5 outlining, 231 pre-drafts, 162 closure, 140 definition, 180–3 interim, 182–3 pulling it all together, 196–7, 235 codes of practice, 47–53 conventions of academic writing, 11–12 design for writing, 197 dialogue, 135–7 creative dialogizing, 136 see also prompts for writing ‘directed questions’, 190 disciplinary differences, 11–13 discussion chapter, 242–3 doctorates, 32–4 full-time/part-time, 41–2 new route, 35–6 professional doctorate, 38–40 external examiner, 247–8, 275–7 ‘fast track’, 217–21 communicate with supervisor(s), 230–1 final tasks, 235–6 make up a writing programme, 227–9 outline each chapter, 231 outline your thesis, 224–7 pull it all together, 235 quantify what you have to do, 221–2 revise, 234–5 start writing, 222–3 write regularly, 232–3 fear, 173–4, 185, 273–5 and loathing, 205–6 feedback, 83–6, 212–4, 234–5 final tasks, 235–6 finishing, 245 concentrated writing phase, 239–40 ‘done-ness is all’, 239 enough is enough, 245–6 marathon, 238 see also layout freewriting, 87–98 discussion chapter, 242 ‘fast track’, 223 literature review, 114 momentum, 233 moving to formal writing, 134 on viva, 259 publications, 286 300 INDEX revising proposal, 104 warm up, 132 frustration, 197–8, 213 generative writing, 99–101 goal-setting, 24–7, 72 end of the second phase, 215 fast track, 220 first writing milestone, 131 final phase, 216, 243 good and bad writing goals, 25–6 for viva, 263–4, 267–8 guilt, 170–1, 220 halfway point, 192–3 incremental writing, 176 IT (information technology), 64–7 introductions, 161–2 iteration, 29, 149, 195–6, 206–7, 212 see also revising journal, 184–190 layout, 46, 250–1 see also finishing literature review, 108–21 location, 127–8 mechanics grammar, punctuation, spelling, 22–4 rules, 158 monitoring, 137–8 see also progress motivation, 156, 250 internal and external drivers, 37 personal, 36–7 problems, 167–8 notes to drafts, 132–5, 162 one-minute paper, 223 originality, 58–60 contribution, 198–202, 248 outlining, 105–7, 196–7, 224–7 see also Brown’s eight questions panic, 221 paragraphing introductory paragraphs, 161–2 links, 159–60 outlining, 161 structure, 157–161 topic sentence, 159–60 peers discussion, 67 study buddy, 165–6 support, 241–2 see also writers’ group plagiarism, 121–2 poster presentation, 142–7 pressure, 138–9, 274 principles of academic writing, 11–12 problems with writing, 167–8 bad writing, 175 prevention, 174 solutions, 173 ‘spring cleaning’, 174 see also writer’s block, frustration and procrastination process of writing, 156 procrastination, 67, 74, 183–4 progress defining, 139–40 work-in-progress, 140–7 see also monitoring prompts for writing, 86–7 chapters, 133 closure, 181 dialogue, 136 engage with key concepts, 62–3 explore ground rules, 47 explore options, 55 final, 251 find focus, 95 formal and informal, 110–11 generate text and reflection, 86–7, 184 outlining, 105–7 regular writing, 167 sections, 162 start writing, 19–20, 74 take stock, 83–4 theme, 135 whole thesis, 224–5 writing about the literature, 109–10, 112 see also journal INDEX proposal revising, 104–5, 215–6 publishing, 139–40, 189, 205, 244–5, 284–8 see also Brown’s eight questions quality, 204, 219, 232–4, 245–50 good enough, 247–8 see also assessment recovering, 284–5 referencing, 121 see also plagiarism regular writing, 190–2, 222, 232–3 regulations, 43–6 research on writing, 12–13 revising, 156 conceptualizing and reconceptualizing, 209–11 forecasting, 207–8 ‘polishing’ the text, 249–50 post-viva, 282–3 signalling, 208–9 signposting, 209 supervisor’s feedback into revisions, 231, 234–5 types, 234–5 see also iteration and proposal revising slide presentations, 143 structure, 123–4, 225–7 students humanities, 16–17 needs, 3–5 301 overseas, 21–2 science and engineering, 17–18 style tips, 244–5, 281 supervisors as audience, 77 as editor, 212–14 assessing, 51 common language for talking about writing, 82–6 enabling student writing, 20–1 first meeting, 68–9 role, 78–82 talking points, 230–1 views on writing, 218 timetable for writing, 29–30, 227–29, 251–2 viva, 254–85 definition, 256–260 mini-viva, 45 mock, 273 notetaking, 278 practice, 141, 267–8 preparation, 263–4 purpose, 258 questions, 268–72 talking about writing, 265–7, 270, 279–81 see also assessment well-being, 240–1 writer’s block, 168–176 writers’ group, 147–153, 267 writing manager, 219–20 ... be an active decision rather than a ‘waitand-see’ passive process The ‘wait-and-see’ approach has another potential disadvantage: you may learn less about writing; you may not develop as a writer... ‘genres’ of academic writing and Swales and Feak (1994) demonstrated a genre-based approach in a textbook for non-native speakers of English that has relevance for native speakers • Torrance et al (1993).. .How to Write a Thesis SECOND EDITION How to Write a Thesis SECOND EDITION Rowena Murray Open University Press Open University Press McGraw-Hill Education McGraw-Hill House Shoppenhangers Road

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  • Cover

  • Half title

  • Title

  • Copyright

  • Contents

  • Acknowledgements

  • Introduction

  • Chapter 1

  • Chapter 2

  • Chapter 3

  • Chapter 4

  • Chapter 5

  • Chapter 6

  • Chapter 7

  • Chapter 8

  • Chapter 9

  • Chapter 10

  • Bibliography

  • Index

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